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Chicago examiner vol ix no 41 a m sunday Chicago april 11 1909 sunday peice five cents gambling closed in Chicago for first saturday night in months big operators in panic over raids by state's attorney wayman s detectives lid on to stay is promisei t â€” mayor and chief shippy order the police to stop all gaming k i ot a card turned or a roulette 1 ball spun in chicago's big i * gambling dens last night the lid was fitted on to a fraction of an inch by the gambling onslaught con ducted friday night and early satur day morning by state's attorney vay man the big gamblers â€” the men who dic tate when and where gambling shall be conducted â€” such as mont tenues big jim o'leary john f o'malley pat o'malley tom mcginnis johnny rogers john burns and bob mott the colored gambling dic tator were pauiu-strickeu and last night not only closed their own games but ordered their lieutenants to cease all gambling at once for the first saturday night in mouths the games were slopped l'"or weeks past the gamblers have been reaping a golden harvest the games have been open so open in fact that george brown the keeper of a gambling house at thirty-first street and cottage grove avenue was snot in his own resort by a player who thought he bad been cheated and no arrests were made suctden change in situation cappers have stood out in front of gam bling dens inviting the public inside and newspaper reporters have had no difficulty ln invading all of thc big resorts by one sudden stroke state attorney wayman has changed the entire gambling situation and it is promised that from this time on Chicago is to be rid of open gam bling all of the police inspectors reported to chief shippy that there was no gambling in their districts but state's attorney wayman a big stick caused gambling to f-lcse down last night in the following p:aces johnny rogers west madison street saloon james o'learys hoot and halsted streets put o'mailcy's rsaloon polk and clark streets hani cohen's game hunt's hotel madi 3i and dearborn streets phil wexler's sambliug house congress street snd wabash avenue tuckhorn's gambling rooms wabash ave nue and hubbard court johu 1 o'maliey's games kinzie and north clark streets wuyman's four spectacular raids one of them at 3 a m at the wellington hotel there a miliionuire's same has been housed for several weeks according to the slate's attorney's information was his first intimation that he intended to stop gam bling it proved effective for orders were sent along underground wires all over the city for gambling to cease blow al police officers the male's attorney's action was a direct blow at the commanding officers in the police epartment and caused mayor busse and chief shippy to order every man on the police department to get busy and at tack thc gamblers on all sides the state's attorney was more myste rious than usual when discussing gambliug but both his remarks and statements made by chic shippy showed that the gamblers were to be showed no mercy nothing doing to-day boys was the way in which state's attorney wayman greeted groups of inquirers then he out lined his position by stating i believe that gambling should be stopped and when certain places were complained of to me 1 ordered my men to go out and arrest every one they found gambling in an open gambling house i did this because it is my duty to stop gambling chief shippy and i are the best of friends and i know that he will do all in his power to stop gambling will you make more raids was in quired there will be no raids to-night but what will be done in the future i cannot disclose he replied reasons for wayman raids wayman refused to state why he made fc_s sudden onslaught on the gamblers cjtoout letting the police into his con tinence but it is believed that it was done with the intentiou of teaching both the police and the gamblers a lesson i has reached he state's attorney's ars that the gamblers have been openly boasting that they could go ahead with their games and hat they had fixed the state's attorney when the real ruler of the gamblin world sent word that the games in their territories could continue it was a general ly understood thing that the state's at torney ad promised not to interfere pen these stories reached stateis attor wayman s ears along with rumors assessments had been levied anions ambiets with the statement that the fo :.. t j , ., be f fit of tlle wg man on the ) mrv his wrath arose and he d chicajd to the same medicine that forecaster promises ideal day tor hats p e easter weather forecast in * dicates that there need he no apprehension for the new spring hate and gowns which will be worn to church to-day according to the official prognostication th morning is to he fair and warm in the afternoon there will he some cloudiness bnt the forecaster does not prediot rain in this zone there is to he no drop of temperature at any time but rather a steady rise ferdinand pinney earle sails to seek first wife original affinity goes abroad to ef-j feet reconciliation with woman he cast off new york april 10 ferdinand pin ney earle"s present trip to europe is made with the intention of regaining his first wife that became known to-day when it was learned that he sailed on la touraine not much surprise was caused by the an nouncement that he would seek to regain tlie affections of the woman he cast off in order to marry julia kuttner the soul mate who ls now suing him for annul ment the first mrs _ earie herself said more than a year ago he would be coming around again she told friends at the time that the soul mate idea would play out ln a very short time and tshe has reiterated the statement since she bas been living with her children and her parents near parts her friends assert however that earle's attempt at reconciliation will be in vain they recall that only two weeks ago at the time when julia kuttner began her suit the first mrs earle in a cabled inter view said she never wished to see her for mer husband again and that she would not return to live with him under any cir cumstances moreover her father has announced that he will not permit a reunion even if his daughter is willing she is now under his protection and he says he intends that she shall stay there safe from any further chance of matrimonial tragedy for the rest of her life chicagoan helps yale w w borden pays 4,000 mortgage on university mission building new haven conn april 10 a spe cial meeting of the yale corporation has been called for next thursr ay the date having been selected as a convenient one for presdent Taft who will attend the yale graduate committee organized not long ago to secure positions for new grad uates has in the last year had 4o appli cants one hundred and twenty positions were offered of which fifty were filled the yale hope mission organized for relief work for men among new haven's poor has bought a building costing 24,000 ou court street of which all but 4,000 re mains on morgage the 84,000 was given by w w borden of Chicago a member of the academic senior class seek for peat co assets stockholders of missing concern to organize for legal fight stockholders in the Illinois peat fuel company which disappeared from its chi cago offices some months ago will carry on an aggressive search for the company's 500.000 in assets a meeting of the stockholders is to be held in the offices of attorney daniel s wentworth 100 washington street early in the week attorney wentworth yesterday said that the formal demand on secretary-treasurer j b dennis mi of the american peat and fertilizer company for information con cerning the Illinois company of which he was secretary-treasurer had not resulted in any information he declared that the official would be compelled by a court order to produce the information unless he voluntarily produced lt alarm over wilhelmina holland fears queen's condition has changed for the worse the hague april 10 the gravest alarm is felt over the condition of queen wllhelmina on account of a rumor spread broadcast to-day that the state of her health has taken an unfavorable turn the queen is soon expected to present holland with an heir to the throne and her sub jects are in dread lest another keen disap pointment is in store for them while it ls officially announced that the queen's condition is most satisfactory the fact that the court physicians have had frequent and lengthy consultations has caused the spread of the report that her condition has undergone a change for the worse one dies in fire on ship baggage of sixty men destroyed but vessel saved san fkancisco cal april 10 one man was suffocated and the baggage of sixty japanese was totally destroyed in a fire that broke out shortly after 2 o'clock this morning in the ship tacoma of the alaska packers association at the stuart street wharf arthur thorn the ship's cook was suffocated in his cabin the tacoma was ready to sail early this mora ing for the salmon fisheries of alaska and had several hundred men on board the blaze which did more than 6,000 damage was discovered just in time to save the huge ship from burning to the water's edge 2 killed by blast in lemont quarry foreman forgets dynamite j had been put in stone last fall orders rock broken â– many laborers escape while stooping at work when explosion occurs two men were killed two more prob ably fatally injured and fifty-one work men had narrow escapes when a charge of dynamite exploded in the quarry of the Illinois stone company at lemont 111 yesterday the accident occurred in the afternoon when august steinke the fore mau ordered workmen to break with sledges a large stone while it was on a car nels nelson swung his sledge once and the blow exploded the eharge which had been placed in the stone last fall and had been forgotten the stone and half a dozen others were blown to pieces killing the foreman and powder monkey out right . the shower of small stones scat tered in all directions and passed over the heads of the other workmen the dead are julius steinke forty-one years old fore man father of four children michael kluga forty-eight years old powder man father of seven children blown to pieces the injured nels neteon twentj'-six years old la borer both legs and skull fractured re moved to st joseph's hospital at joliet edward . schucider eighteen years old skull fractured taken to st joseph's hos pital at joliet laborers narrowly escape john klein seventeen years old was standing between steinke and kluga but escaped without the slightest injury the men were working within twenty-five feet of the car at the time and all bending over their work escaped the deadly shower of broken stones the scene of the explosion is half a mile east of the town of lemont and residents of that place hearing the report hurried to the qunrry steinke was well known in inmost having been a candidate for alder man several times on the citizens ticket he was foreman last year for the lemont i 3tone company and recently resigned to take a foreman's position with the Illinois stone company dynamite boring forgotten according to workmen kluga knew that last fall a number of holes were drilled and charged with the explosive and all but one discharged kluga evidently forgot this fact and this slip of his memory cost him and his foreman their lives the stone was loaded on the top of a pile of others and when the car had been louded and ready to be hauled to a crusher by means of a steel cable steinke decided the top stone was too big for the machine and or dered it broken in two pieces with thc death of kluga the last of four brothers of that family have met violent and sudder deaths the first was shot to death by state militia in 1893 when he at tempted to pass a picket line outside of lemont where a strike was in progress three years ago two other brothers were instantly killed when a buggy in which they were driving near joliet was struck by a passenger train nurse for mrs deneen physician says she must remain quiet at least two weeks springfield 111 april 10.-jtfrs charles s denee.n's condition to-night is unchanged a trained nurse arrived at noon as her physician has decided that she must remain qniet for at least two weeks the exact nature of her ailment has not been determined by the doctor mrs deneen has not been in robust health for some time the entire family except the baby have been subject all winter to spells resemlbling the grip and mrs de neen has at times been compelled to take to her bed for a day or two it is ad mitted that she is very sick but her physician declares that her condition is not serious and that no dangerous com plications are like'y union denounces Taft international hod carriers question stand on injunctions new york april 10.-the international hod carriers and laborers union today is sued a statement deuounclng president Taft as follows in his inaugural address president Taft made himself well understood upon the in junction question the federal injunction he says must stand of course it must stand because it orig inated in his aristicratic jabor-hating brain it was-he who conceived the plan to use the federal judiciary to browbeat tae labor movement into submission students in auto trap two evanston youths home for easter arrested for speeding evanston's automobile policemen got busy yesterday and ns a result two young college students who are home on their easter vacations fell into the auto trap that had been spread on ridge avenue donald boyntou 1005 sheridan road high laud park a student at yale and christy brown of kenilworth a student at north western were the men arrested brown it is alleged was speeding at the rate of thirty miles an hour he paid a fine of 23 and costs boynton will have his case heard by justice boyer on monday brown was taking his first ride in his new ma chine and said be could not resist the temptation to see how fast jt could go 1 Chicago women win glove and stocking tax fight joker protects all of oil trust's by-products hidden clause puts duty on rockefeller sidelines democrats are astounded at : discovery of trick payne ; denies intention to deceive j says let courts decide j plan move to-morrow to : make free list secure ] reconsideration will be de 2 - manded and amendment in : serted to carry out inten : tions of no-tariff advocates \ scandal declares senator culberson : washington april 10 at no time in the history of the standard oil company and its relations to legislation has there been uncovered such a scandal as was revealed to-day in the bill which passed the house it was generally pre sumed that . petroleum crude and re j fined its accessories and byproducts were on the free-list through analy sis of the bill as passed by the house and to-day reported to the senate it is discovered that none of the byprod ucts of oil refineries except paraffin are mentioned in the payne bill in j any manner whatsoever in the expiring moments of the house's j consideration of the tariff schedule a joker was rung in on unsuspecting mem bers and it passed democrats were asleep they vainly imagined that thev were bar gaining or free oil champ clark minor ity leader seemed peculiarly pleased and gratified when yesterday morning repre sentative payne chairman of the ways and means committee asked that clark's amendment fixing an ad valorem of 1 per cent on oil be disagreed to and an amend ment for free oil substituted the democratic members cheered they had won the republicans to their side in the militant fight they had made against the oil monopoly to have the chairman of the ways and means committee go even further than their bill had provided for was happy news reporter discovers joker it was a pretty trick a young reporter discovered the joker this afternoon he found that on page 159 section 637 tinder the schedule of oils oiis on the free list that petroleum crude or refined was men tioned then turning to section 9 of the third division of the bill page 192 of the measure it was revealed that this para graph was inserted that there shall he collected and paid on the importation of all raw or unman ufactured articles not enumerated or pro vided in this act a duty of 10 per centum ad valorem and on all articles manufac tured in whole or m part not provided for in this act a duty of 20 per centum ad valorem thus the by-products rramentjo'ned in the oil schedule are to have an ad valorem of 20 per centum and it mast be remembered that the by-products of refineries are the chief sources of revenue that the profits of oil manufactories like the one at wait ing ind bayonne n j and in other places maintained by the standard oil af ford that company its chief source of reve nue and profit speaker cannon who even the dÂ»y before the tariff bill passed the house made an im passioned speech in favor of a 25 per cent ad valorem dutv on oil and yet after the resolution of mr payne reducing the sched ule to the free list made no dissent de clined to-night to utter a word either in defense or in criticism of this joker but mr payne is less timorous scandal says culberson yes he said i knew what we were doing i hold that any and all products of oil come in free while the language of the bill may not state so specifically vet the common understanding was and is that oil its assets by-products etc ave to be admitted free our courts have given us interpretations we know where we stand Â»â€¢,'''.Â«. it is one of the wdrst scandals i have ever heard of since i nave been in public life " said senator culberson floor leader of the democratic side of the senate in an interview to-night what we on the senate side shall do i am not prepared at this moment to state but it may be in teresting for some to listen to the proceed ings that will take place on monday were i a member of the house under the circumstances i should first thing monday moniiii when that body meets seek to have the whole bill reported back recon sidered and its false and scandalous joker exposed champ clark was dazed when informed of the joker he read and re-read the paragraph i don't know i can't under stand he said give me time to think about it senator bailey was in the lobby of the house at the time the oil schedule was being considered and there are rumors to night that he had a hand in the joker late to-higbt it was announced a motion would be made as soon as the house con venes monday to recall the bill as sent to the senate and amend paragraph tv>7 by inserting the words and its products in place of the words crude and refined so that the reading would be petroleum and products thus making absolutely sure of there being no mistake in this im portant item of the free list i standard oil's don quixote senate yields to petition of feminine economists finance committee strikes out payne bill provision raising tariff on leather gloves and cotton hosiery Chicago women win Taft over to their cause crusaders have a long talk with the president and now look upon him as future champion of their causjt senate accepts petition barred frpm the house a washington april 10 the senate finance committee to-day struck out of tht payne tariff bill the provision luciecfi tag the tariff op teii.flgjti rlov^s an cotton ho&iery and reÃŸbrer the rate aa contained in the dtegiey act this . is a decisive victory for the Chicago women who sent the monster petition protesting against the increased tax president Taft met the delegation of ch cago women champions of a low tariff on hosiery and gloves to-day at the white house and he ls theirs mr Taft produced the distinct impres sion on the delegates that he regards the raising of the stocking and glove tariff as - ' iniquitous it is not possible to repori minutely what takes place at these private seances but the fact remains that the president ls to use his powers as unobtru sively but as deftly as he can to aid the aldrich committee to reduce the payne figures to the dlngley figures the president was very adroit but suave and gracious to his callers who were in troduced to him by representative wilson of Chicago mrs freeman brown took the lead in the conversation with the president because it was all conversation just as if lt were at a tea table or at a bargain counter he makes diplomatic answer mr brown told the president about the great efforts the women of the clubs made to get up the magnificent petition which senator cullom proudly launched upon the senate to-day mrs brown had all about gloves at her finger tips as lt were and she spoke eloquently not only on that subject bnt on that of hosiery and the absolute folly of raising a tariff al ready high and particularly as the raise in rates would not affect the revenue f now mr president said mrs browifl in peroration do you think that there h any justification for this raise this was the argumentum ad horuinewm and the president's eyes twinkled theim he laughed a hearty laugh he became fal miliar with leading questions when he was on the bench ' madame he eventually said i hearo this qnestion discussed yesterday and nowv by this delegation ln a most interesting way of course the bill has not been passed yet and there ls a good deal of time left in which to discuss lt this did not occur to the women as in dicating anything in particular but they did not press for a direct answer then they got in good with his excellency and they all came away firmly convinced that the president stands with them and their patriotic movement petition presented in senate mrs heudetson mrs lewis and the others presented to the president said that he would do a great thing for the bill if he were to keep in mind always the ap peals of the women throughout the conn try his manner seemed to them to mean that they had struck a big friend tn the right place and at the right time so they all left happy representative wilson who is not un usually sanguine on most things got the impression also that stockings and gloves would be all right in the long run senator cullom rose to the occasion to day and presented the petition to the sen-_sjj ate it was of course referred to theh aldrich committee but it ha s the advansj tape of now being officially before con-m si-ess a position it might have had in theh house but for the action of mr mann the quiet effective way in which ' theh women of Chicago worked here has convl mended them to the politicians they s surerily made a decided impression on thefl president thev will go home to-morrowfl the Chicago delegation with one or twofl exceptions thinks they ought to aer arh ovation a representatives lorlmer and lowdenfl asked the president to-dav to anrointl i thomas l hartigan a Chicago lawyer afll > a member of the civil service rommlsslflÃŸ r of the philippine islands to fill thlflfli â€¢ canoy created by the resignation ojfljt h * j washburn gjebe john d is called another capt kidd keilogg in argument against standard oil says rocke feller is a pirate st louis mo april 10.-johu d rockefeller was called a captain kidd to-day by frank b keilogg chief counsel for the government in the suit to dissolve the standard oil company which ended in the federal circuit court at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon kellogg's argu ment closed the case which has been ar gued all week before judges sanborn hook yandeventer and adams sitting en banc a decision in the case is not ex pected before fall keilogg characterized the entire line of defense as weak declaring that the oil company's attorneys did not know what they were talking about they talk about john d rockefeller having faith and courage in his enter prises and being a good business man he said so did captain kidd have faith and courage and he flew the black flag of piracy and tyrrany god pity the ameri can people if they take this as an example ot foresight thrift and business courage the standard oil company has operated as we have shown more than sixty secret companies why did lt buy more than 100 refineries and dismantle them this is not thrift courage and business foresight it is one o the many acts of the standard oil company to stifle and kill competition it ls an example of the dishonest competition oppression and vice that has characterized the working of this monopoly keilogg in his argument reviewed every phase of the case advanced by the govern ment he declared the enormous unreas onable and absurd profits of the standard ou company evidences a monopoly in the oil business he asserted that 30,000,000 of the capitalization of the standard oil company of new jersey ls tn the form of water and that 15,000,000 of it has never been paid for or was an overvaluation according to the testimony and the other like amount a stock dividend he said lt was possible to understand how the stand ard might obtain preferential rates when it is recalled that at one-time the standard oil company loaned 32,000,000 to wall street with the exception of keilogg all attor neys and judges in the case left st louis to-day for washington keilogg stayed over to play golf at the country club to morrow and will leave sunday night at the southern hotel late this afternoon federal judge sanborn was asked when a decision in the case might be expected he said he had no means of knowing that the matter had not been discussed the judges would not sit again until may 4 when they will convene a session of the united states circuit court at st paul it was reported from an authoritative source to-night that the four judges will spend their vacation together at lake minnetonka minn in august when the decision will be written by judge hook winnipeg man surrenders winnipeg man april 10.-w coul son secretary of the retail merchants association gave himself up to the police here he is charged with misappropriating several thousand dollars of funds cleland has new names for olson calls chief justice victim of arrested development pet tifogger and usurper chief justice harry olson is a victim of arrested development a usurper of power and a pettifogger judge mcken zie cleland as a judge mr cleland is irresponsible and not worthy of serious consideration â€” chief justice olson these are the latest contributions in the muulcipal court parole controversy in which judge cleland has opposed the en tire court chief justice included judge cleland's views were expressed yesterday afternoon before the Illinois as sociation of lawyers at the sherman house judge olsen paid his respects to his brother jurist in the evening when he heard about the speech chief justice oldsen said judge cle land ha6 arrogated to himself the right to boss the municipal court and there ls not one word in the law that justifies such an assumption of power in the second annual report of the court he starts out by saying the chief justice is general superintendent of the court he misinterprets a section of the law which fixes his status not as general superintendent but as chief clerk he is trying to make the municipal court with all its branches a one-man system and if his usurpation of power is allowed to go unchallenged the efficiency of the court will be ruined once when a case was taken from the municipal court to the appellate court and reversed chief justice olson said to the plaintiff you ought not to have taken that case to the appellate court these reversals are hurting us why didn't you bring the case to me and i would have instructed the judge to reverse his de cision the chief justice by law does not have the power to transfer judges arbitrarily as he has assumed to do the lawyers association elected richard j cooney president and albert j appell secretary edison settles suits actions brought by phonograph co involving 2,000,000 are ended orange n j april 10.-after an all night conference at the union national bank in newark yesterday thomas a edi son of west orange has settled suits brought against him by the new york phonograph company which involved near ly 2,000,000 the suits were brought for territorial rights for the sale of edison phonographs and phonographic supplies in new york state and was begun in 1901 by jcmes ij anden of bloomfield secretarv of the new york company which had pur chased the new york state rights edison who is in fort meyers fla was kept in formed of the progress 0 the conference by wire continued on 4th page 2d column a 3-lins ad inserted in the examiner 3 weex days and one sunday under sit uation wanted costs but 90 cents and reaches a million readers the adver tiser also receives the services of the examiner employment exchana i looking for a position try itt j you mÂ»y not always get what you eo *"â€¢Â»., it's a cinch you have to lo after anything you gn ths best way to go after a job u through an bxam iiner aa ku try it "â€¢ "" â€¢* sxlu -% kv > when you advertise is the examiner's situation wanted columns you get not only a great newspaper circulation for your ad hut you receive the services of the examiner employment exchange a service which would cost you a week's salary elsewhere it's cheap â€” but not too cheap to be efficient * km Chicago and vicinity fair j v*r sunday afternoon or night rising j vj settled and warmer southeast to ikjf _________ s * i!v v iâ€”wbwb1 â€” wbwb - 6 â€” editobiax v_mÃŸ va 2 fokeiok drama jt?i-jm ri'-s 3 mai estate societt ev^^^st \ ai ciiassrfied music t 7 y.l *â€” atttos 7 vkaoazine }*,__Â¥ k sports 8 comic /___% __$Â£* 6 â€” r-qtah-ciai u_vr

Chicago examiner vol ix no 41 a m sunday Chicago april 11 1909 sunday peice five cents gambling closed in Chicago for first saturday night in months big operators in panic over raids by state's attorney wayman s detectives lid on to stay is promisei t â€” mayor and chief shippy order the police to stop all gaming k i ot a card turned or a roulette 1 ball spun in chicago's big i * gambling dens last night the lid was fitted on to a fraction of an inch by the gambling onslaught con ducted friday night and early satur day morning by state's attorney vay man the big gamblers â€” the men who dic tate when and where gambling shall be conducted â€” such as mont tenues big jim o'leary john f o'malley pat o'malley tom mcginnis johnny rogers john burns and bob mott the colored gambling dic tator were pauiu-strickeu and last night not only closed their own games but ordered their lieutenants to cease all gambling at once for the first saturday night in mouths the games were slopped l'"or weeks past the gamblers have been reaping a golden harvest the games have been open so open in fact that george brown the keeper of a gambling house at thirty-first street and cottage grove avenue was snot in his own resort by a player who thought he bad been cheated and no arrests were made suctden change in situation cappers have stood out in front of gam bling dens inviting the public inside and newspaper reporters have had no difficulty ln invading all of thc big resorts by one sudden stroke state attorney wayman has changed the entire gambling situation and it is promised that from this time on Chicago is to be rid of open gam bling all of the police inspectors reported to chief shippy that there was no gambling in their districts but state's attorney wayman a big stick caused gambling to f-lcse down last night in the following p:aces johnny rogers west madison street saloon james o'learys hoot and halsted streets put o'mailcy's rsaloon polk and clark streets hani cohen's game hunt's hotel madi 3i and dearborn streets phil wexler's sambliug house congress street snd wabash avenue tuckhorn's gambling rooms wabash ave nue and hubbard court johu 1 o'maliey's games kinzie and north clark streets wuyman's four spectacular raids one of them at 3 a m at the wellington hotel there a miliionuire's same has been housed for several weeks according to the slate's attorney's information was his first intimation that he intended to stop gam bling it proved effective for orders were sent along underground wires all over the city for gambling to cease blow al police officers the male's attorney's action was a direct blow at the commanding officers in the police epartment and caused mayor busse and chief shippy to order every man on the police department to get busy and at tack thc gamblers on all sides the state's attorney was more myste rious than usual when discussing gambliug but both his remarks and statements made by chic shippy showed that the gamblers were to be showed no mercy nothing doing to-day boys was the way in which state's attorney wayman greeted groups of inquirers then he out lined his position by stating i believe that gambling should be stopped and when certain places were complained of to me 1 ordered my men to go out and arrest every one they found gambling in an open gambling house i did this because it is my duty to stop gambling chief shippy and i are the best of friends and i know that he will do all in his power to stop gambling will you make more raids was in quired there will be no raids to-night but what will be done in the future i cannot disclose he replied reasons for wayman raids wayman refused to state why he made fc_s sudden onslaught on the gamblers cjtoout letting the police into his con tinence but it is believed that it was done with the intentiou of teaching both the police and the gamblers a lesson i has reached he state's attorney's ars that the gamblers have been openly boasting that they could go ahead with their games and hat they had fixed the state's attorney when the real ruler of the gamblin world sent word that the games in their territories could continue it was a general ly understood thing that the state's at torney ad promised not to interfere pen these stories reached stateis attor wayman s ears along with rumors assessments had been levied anions ambiets with the statement that the fo :.. t j , ., be f fit of tlle wg man on the ) mrv his wrath arose and he d chicajd to the same medicine that forecaster promises ideal day tor hats p e easter weather forecast in * dicates that there need he no apprehension for the new spring hate and gowns which will be worn to church to-day according to the official prognostication th morning is to he fair and warm in the afternoon there will he some cloudiness bnt the forecaster does not prediot rain in this zone there is to he no drop of temperature at any time but rather a steady rise ferdinand pinney earle sails to seek first wife original affinity goes abroad to ef-j feet reconciliation with woman he cast off new york april 10 ferdinand pin ney earle"s present trip to europe is made with the intention of regaining his first wife that became known to-day when it was learned that he sailed on la touraine not much surprise was caused by the an nouncement that he would seek to regain tlie affections of the woman he cast off in order to marry julia kuttner the soul mate who ls now suing him for annul ment the first mrs _ earie herself said more than a year ago he would be coming around again she told friends at the time that the soul mate idea would play out ln a very short time and tshe has reiterated the statement since she bas been living with her children and her parents near parts her friends assert however that earle's attempt at reconciliation will be in vain they recall that only two weeks ago at the time when julia kuttner began her suit the first mrs earle in a cabled inter view said she never wished to see her for mer husband again and that she would not return to live with him under any cir cumstances moreover her father has announced that he will not permit a reunion even if his daughter is willing she is now under his protection and he says he intends that she shall stay there safe from any further chance of matrimonial tragedy for the rest of her life chicagoan helps yale w w borden pays 4,000 mortgage on university mission building new haven conn april 10 a spe cial meeting of the yale corporation has been called for next thursr ay the date having been selected as a convenient one for presdent Taft who will attend the yale graduate committee organized not long ago to secure positions for new grad uates has in the last year had 4o appli cants one hundred and twenty positions were offered of which fifty were filled the yale hope mission organized for relief work for men among new haven's poor has bought a building costing 24,000 ou court street of which all but 4,000 re mains on morgage the 84,000 was given by w w borden of Chicago a member of the academic senior class seek for peat co assets stockholders of missing concern to organize for legal fight stockholders in the Illinois peat fuel company which disappeared from its chi cago offices some months ago will carry on an aggressive search for the company's 500.000 in assets a meeting of the stockholders is to be held in the offices of attorney daniel s wentworth 100 washington street early in the week attorney wentworth yesterday said that the formal demand on secretary-treasurer j b dennis mi of the american peat and fertilizer company for information con cerning the Illinois company of which he was secretary-treasurer had not resulted in any information he declared that the official would be compelled by a court order to produce the information unless he voluntarily produced lt alarm over wilhelmina holland fears queen's condition has changed for the worse the hague april 10 the gravest alarm is felt over the condition of queen wllhelmina on account of a rumor spread broadcast to-day that the state of her health has taken an unfavorable turn the queen is soon expected to present holland with an heir to the throne and her sub jects are in dread lest another keen disap pointment is in store for them while it ls officially announced that the queen's condition is most satisfactory the fact that the court physicians have had frequent and lengthy consultations has caused the spread of the report that her condition has undergone a change for the worse one dies in fire on ship baggage of sixty men destroyed but vessel saved san fkancisco cal april 10 one man was suffocated and the baggage of sixty japanese was totally destroyed in a fire that broke out shortly after 2 o'clock this morning in the ship tacoma of the alaska packers association at the stuart street wharf arthur thorn the ship's cook was suffocated in his cabin the tacoma was ready to sail early this mora ing for the salmon fisheries of alaska and had several hundred men on board the blaze which did more than 6,000 damage was discovered just in time to save the huge ship from burning to the water's edge 2 killed by blast in lemont quarry foreman forgets dynamite j had been put in stone last fall orders rock broken â– many laborers escape while stooping at work when explosion occurs two men were killed two more prob ably fatally injured and fifty-one work men had narrow escapes when a charge of dynamite exploded in the quarry of the Illinois stone company at lemont 111 yesterday the accident occurred in the afternoon when august steinke the fore mau ordered workmen to break with sledges a large stone while it was on a car nels nelson swung his sledge once and the blow exploded the eharge which had been placed in the stone last fall and had been forgotten the stone and half a dozen others were blown to pieces killing the foreman and powder monkey out right . the shower of small stones scat tered in all directions and passed over the heads of the other workmen the dead are julius steinke forty-one years old fore man father of four children michael kluga forty-eight years old powder man father of seven children blown to pieces the injured nels neteon twentj'-six years old la borer both legs and skull fractured re moved to st joseph's hospital at joliet edward . schucider eighteen years old skull fractured taken to st joseph's hos pital at joliet laborers narrowly escape john klein seventeen years old was standing between steinke and kluga but escaped without the slightest injury the men were working within twenty-five feet of the car at the time and all bending over their work escaped the deadly shower of broken stones the scene of the explosion is half a mile east of the town of lemont and residents of that place hearing the report hurried to the qunrry steinke was well known in inmost having been a candidate for alder man several times on the citizens ticket he was foreman last year for the lemont i 3tone company and recently resigned to take a foreman's position with the Illinois stone company dynamite boring forgotten according to workmen kluga knew that last fall a number of holes were drilled and charged with the explosive and all but one discharged kluga evidently forgot this fact and this slip of his memory cost him and his foreman their lives the stone was loaded on the top of a pile of others and when the car had been louded and ready to be hauled to a crusher by means of a steel cable steinke decided the top stone was too big for the machine and or dered it broken in two pieces with thc death of kluga the last of four brothers of that family have met violent and sudder deaths the first was shot to death by state militia in 1893 when he at tempted to pass a picket line outside of lemont where a strike was in progress three years ago two other brothers were instantly killed when a buggy in which they were driving near joliet was struck by a passenger train nurse for mrs deneen physician says she must remain quiet at least two weeks springfield 111 april 10.-jtfrs charles s denee.n's condition to-night is unchanged a trained nurse arrived at noon as her physician has decided that she must remain qniet for at least two weeks the exact nature of her ailment has not been determined by the doctor mrs deneen has not been in robust health for some time the entire family except the baby have been subject all winter to spells resemlbling the grip and mrs de neen has at times been compelled to take to her bed for a day or two it is ad mitted that she is very sick but her physician declares that her condition is not serious and that no dangerous com plications are like'y union denounces Taft international hod carriers question stand on injunctions new york april 10.-the international hod carriers and laborers union today is sued a statement deuounclng president Taft as follows in his inaugural address president Taft made himself well understood upon the in junction question the federal injunction he says must stand of course it must stand because it orig inated in his aristicratic jabor-hating brain it was-he who conceived the plan to use the federal judiciary to browbeat tae labor movement into submission students in auto trap two evanston youths home for easter arrested for speeding evanston's automobile policemen got busy yesterday and ns a result two young college students who are home on their easter vacations fell into the auto trap that had been spread on ridge avenue donald boyntou 1005 sheridan road high laud park a student at yale and christy brown of kenilworth a student at north western were the men arrested brown it is alleged was speeding at the rate of thirty miles an hour he paid a fine of 23 and costs boynton will have his case heard by justice boyer on monday brown was taking his first ride in his new ma chine and said be could not resist the temptation to see how fast jt could go 1 Chicago women win glove and stocking tax fight joker protects all of oil trust's by-products hidden clause puts duty on rockefeller sidelines democrats are astounded at : discovery of trick payne ; denies intention to deceive j says let courts decide j plan move to-morrow to : make free list secure ] reconsideration will be de 2 - manded and amendment in : serted to carry out inten : tions of no-tariff advocates \ scandal declares senator culberson : washington april 10 at no time in the history of the standard oil company and its relations to legislation has there been uncovered such a scandal as was revealed to-day in the bill which passed the house it was generally pre sumed that . petroleum crude and re j fined its accessories and byproducts were on the free-list through analy sis of the bill as passed by the house and to-day reported to the senate it is discovered that none of the byprod ucts of oil refineries except paraffin are mentioned in the payne bill in j any manner whatsoever in the expiring moments of the house's j consideration of the tariff schedule a joker was rung in on unsuspecting mem bers and it passed democrats were asleep they vainly imagined that thev were bar gaining or free oil champ clark minor ity leader seemed peculiarly pleased and gratified when yesterday morning repre sentative payne chairman of the ways and means committee asked that clark's amendment fixing an ad valorem of 1 per cent on oil be disagreed to and an amend ment for free oil substituted the democratic members cheered they had won the republicans to their side in the militant fight they had made against the oil monopoly to have the chairman of the ways and means committee go even further than their bill had provided for was happy news reporter discovers joker it was a pretty trick a young reporter discovered the joker this afternoon he found that on page 159 section 637 tinder the schedule of oils oiis on the free list that petroleum crude or refined was men tioned then turning to section 9 of the third division of the bill page 192 of the measure it was revealed that this para graph was inserted that there shall he collected and paid on the importation of all raw or unman ufactured articles not enumerated or pro vided in this act a duty of 10 per centum ad valorem and on all articles manufac tured in whole or m part not provided for in this act a duty of 20 per centum ad valorem thus the by-products rramentjo'ned in the oil schedule are to have an ad valorem of 20 per centum and it mast be remembered that the by-products of refineries are the chief sources of revenue that the profits of oil manufactories like the one at wait ing ind bayonne n j and in other places maintained by the standard oil af ford that company its chief source of reve nue and profit speaker cannon who even the dÂ»y before the tariff bill passed the house made an im passioned speech in favor of a 25 per cent ad valorem dutv on oil and yet after the resolution of mr payne reducing the sched ule to the free list made no dissent de clined to-night to utter a word either in defense or in criticism of this joker but mr payne is less timorous scandal says culberson yes he said i knew what we were doing i hold that any and all products of oil come in free while the language of the bill may not state so specifically vet the common understanding was and is that oil its assets by-products etc ave to be admitted free our courts have given us interpretations we know where we stand Â»â€¢,'''.Â«. it is one of the wdrst scandals i have ever heard of since i nave been in public life " said senator culberson floor leader of the democratic side of the senate in an interview to-night what we on the senate side shall do i am not prepared at this moment to state but it may be in teresting for some to listen to the proceed ings that will take place on monday were i a member of the house under the circumstances i should first thing monday moniiii when that body meets seek to have the whole bill reported back recon sidered and its false and scandalous joker exposed champ clark was dazed when informed of the joker he read and re-read the paragraph i don't know i can't under stand he said give me time to think about it senator bailey was in the lobby of the house at the time the oil schedule was being considered and there are rumors to night that he had a hand in the joker late to-higbt it was announced a motion would be made as soon as the house con venes monday to recall the bill as sent to the senate and amend paragraph tv>7 by inserting the words and its products in place of the words crude and refined so that the reading would be petroleum and products thus making absolutely sure of there being no mistake in this im portant item of the free list i standard oil's don quixote senate yields to petition of feminine economists finance committee strikes out payne bill provision raising tariff on leather gloves and cotton hosiery Chicago women win Taft over to their cause crusaders have a long talk with the president and now look upon him as future champion of their causjt senate accepts petition barred frpm the house a washington april 10 the senate finance committee to-day struck out of tht payne tariff bill the provision luciecfi tag the tariff op teii.flgjti rlov^s an cotton ho&iery and reÃŸbrer the rate aa contained in the dtegiey act this . is a decisive victory for the Chicago women who sent the monster petition protesting against the increased tax president Taft met the delegation of ch cago women champions of a low tariff on hosiery and gloves to-day at the white house and he ls theirs mr Taft produced the distinct impres sion on the delegates that he regards the raising of the stocking and glove tariff as - ' iniquitous it is not possible to repori minutely what takes place at these private seances but the fact remains that the president ls to use his powers as unobtru sively but as deftly as he can to aid the aldrich committee to reduce the payne figures to the dlngley figures the president was very adroit but suave and gracious to his callers who were in troduced to him by representative wilson of Chicago mrs freeman brown took the lead in the conversation with the president because it was all conversation just as if lt were at a tea table or at a bargain counter he makes diplomatic answer mr brown told the president about the great efforts the women of the clubs made to get up the magnificent petition which senator cullom proudly launched upon the senate to-day mrs brown had all about gloves at her finger tips as lt were and she spoke eloquently not only on that subject bnt on that of hosiery and the absolute folly of raising a tariff al ready high and particularly as the raise in rates would not affect the revenue f now mr president said mrs browifl in peroration do you think that there h any justification for this raise this was the argumentum ad horuinewm and the president's eyes twinkled theim he laughed a hearty laugh he became fal miliar with leading questions when he was on the bench ' madame he eventually said i hearo this qnestion discussed yesterday and nowv by this delegation ln a most interesting way of course the bill has not been passed yet and there ls a good deal of time left in which to discuss lt this did not occur to the women as in dicating anything in particular but they did not press for a direct answer then they got in good with his excellency and they all came away firmly convinced that the president stands with them and their patriotic movement petition presented in senate mrs heudetson mrs lewis and the others presented to the president said that he would do a great thing for the bill if he were to keep in mind always the ap peals of the women throughout the conn try his manner seemed to them to mean that they had struck a big friend tn the right place and at the right time so they all left happy representative wilson who is not un usually sanguine on most things got the impression also that stockings and gloves would be all right in the long run senator cullom rose to the occasion to day and presented the petition to the sen-_sjj ate it was of course referred to theh aldrich committee but it ha s the advansj tape of now being officially before con-m si-ess a position it might have had in theh house but for the action of mr mann the quiet effective way in which ' theh women of Chicago worked here has convl mended them to the politicians they s surerily made a decided impression on thefl president thev will go home to-morrowfl the Chicago delegation with one or twofl exceptions thinks they ought to aer arh ovation a representatives lorlmer and lowdenfl asked the president to-dav to anrointl i thomas l hartigan a Chicago lawyer afll > a member of the civil service rommlsslflÃŸ r of the philippine islands to fill thlflfli â€¢ canoy created by the resignation ojfljt h * j washburn gjebe john d is called another capt kidd keilogg in argument against standard oil says rocke feller is a pirate st louis mo april 10.-johu d rockefeller was called a captain kidd to-day by frank b keilogg chief counsel for the government in the suit to dissolve the standard oil company which ended in the federal circuit court at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon kellogg's argu ment closed the case which has been ar gued all week before judges sanborn hook yandeventer and adams sitting en banc a decision in the case is not ex pected before fall keilogg characterized the entire line of defense as weak declaring that the oil company's attorneys did not know what they were talking about they talk about john d rockefeller having faith and courage in his enter prises and being a good business man he said so did captain kidd have faith and courage and he flew the black flag of piracy and tyrrany god pity the ameri can people if they take this as an example ot foresight thrift and business courage the standard oil company has operated as we have shown more than sixty secret companies why did lt buy more than 100 refineries and dismantle them this is not thrift courage and business foresight it is one o the many acts of the standard oil company to stifle and kill competition it ls an example of the dishonest competition oppression and vice that has characterized the working of this monopoly keilogg in his argument reviewed every phase of the case advanced by the govern ment he declared the enormous unreas onable and absurd profits of the standard ou company evidences a monopoly in the oil business he asserted that 30,000,000 of the capitalization of the standard oil company of new jersey ls tn the form of water and that 15,000,000 of it has never been paid for or was an overvaluation according to the testimony and the other like amount a stock dividend he said lt was possible to understand how the stand ard might obtain preferential rates when it is recalled that at one-time the standard oil company loaned 32,000,000 to wall street with the exception of keilogg all attor neys and judges in the case left st louis to-day for washington keilogg stayed over to play golf at the country club to morrow and will leave sunday night at the southern hotel late this afternoon federal judge sanborn was asked when a decision in the case might be expected he said he had no means of knowing that the matter had not been discussed the judges would not sit again until may 4 when they will convene a session of the united states circuit court at st paul it was reported from an authoritative source to-night that the four judges will spend their vacation together at lake minnetonka minn in august when the decision will be written by judge hook winnipeg man surrenders winnipeg man april 10.-w coul son secretary of the retail merchants association gave himself up to the police here he is charged with misappropriating several thousand dollars of funds cleland has new names for olson calls chief justice victim of arrested development pet tifogger and usurper chief justice harry olson is a victim of arrested development a usurper of power and a pettifogger judge mcken zie cleland as a judge mr cleland is irresponsible and not worthy of serious consideration â€” chief justice olson these are the latest contributions in the muulcipal court parole controversy in which judge cleland has opposed the en tire court chief justice included judge cleland's views were expressed yesterday afternoon before the Illinois as sociation of lawyers at the sherman house judge olsen paid his respects to his brother jurist in the evening when he heard about the speech chief justice oldsen said judge cle land ha6 arrogated to himself the right to boss the municipal court and there ls not one word in the law that justifies such an assumption of power in the second annual report of the court he starts out by saying the chief justice is general superintendent of the court he misinterprets a section of the law which fixes his status not as general superintendent but as chief clerk he is trying to make the municipal court with all its branches a one-man system and if his usurpation of power is allowed to go unchallenged the efficiency of the court will be ruined once when a case was taken from the municipal court to the appellate court and reversed chief justice olson said to the plaintiff you ought not to have taken that case to the appellate court these reversals are hurting us why didn't you bring the case to me and i would have instructed the judge to reverse his de cision the chief justice by law does not have the power to transfer judges arbitrarily as he has assumed to do the lawyers association elected richard j cooney president and albert j appell secretary edison settles suits actions brought by phonograph co involving 2,000,000 are ended orange n j april 10.-after an all night conference at the union national bank in newark yesterday thomas a edi son of west orange has settled suits brought against him by the new york phonograph company which involved near ly 2,000,000 the suits were brought for territorial rights for the sale of edison phonographs and phonographic supplies in new york state and was begun in 1901 by jcmes ij anden of bloomfield secretarv of the new york company which had pur chased the new york state rights edison who is in fort meyers fla was kept in formed of the progress 0 the conference by wire continued on 4th page 2d column a 3-lins ad inserted in the examiner 3 weex days and one sunday under sit uation wanted costs but 90 cents and reaches a million readers the adver tiser also receives the services of the examiner employment exchana i looking for a position try itt j you mÂ»y not always get what you eo *"â€¢Â»., it's a cinch you have to lo after anything you gn ths best way to go after a job u through an bxam iiner aa ku try it "â€¢ "" â€¢* sxlu -% kv > when you advertise is the examiner's situation wanted columns you get not only a great newspaper circulation for your ad hut you receive the services of the examiner employment exchange a service which would cost you a week's salary elsewhere it's cheap â€” but not too cheap to be efficient * km Chicago and vicinity fair j v*r sunday afternoon or night rising j vj settled and warmer southeast to ikjf _________ s * i!v v iâ€”wbwb1 â€” wbwb - 6 â€” editobiax v_mÃŸ va 2 fokeiok drama jt?i-jm ri'-s 3 mai estate societt ev^^^st \ ai ciiassrfied music t 7 y.l *â€” atttos 7 vkaoazine }*,__Â¥ k sports 8 comic /___% __$Â£* 6 â€” r-qtah-ciai u_vr